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Xu-Yao Zhang

Total Citations
19
h-index
3
Papers
2

Publications

#1 2604.19167v1 Apr 21, 2026

LBLLM: Lightweight Binarization of Large Language Models via Three-Stage Distillation

Deploying large language models (LLMs) in resource-constrained environments is hindered by heavy computational and memory requirements. We present LBLLM, a lightweight binarization framework that achieves effective W(1+1)A4 quantization through a novel three-stage quantization strategy. The framework proceeds as follows: (1) initialize a high-quality quantized model via PTQ; (2) quantize binarized weights, group-wise bitmaps, and quantization parameters through layer-wise distillation while keeping activations in full precision; and (3) training learnable activation quantization factors to dynamically quantize activations to 4 bits. This decoupled design mitigates interference between weight and activation quantization, yielding greater training stability and better inference accuracy. LBLLM, trained only using 0.016B tokens with a single GPU, surpasses existing state-of-the-art binarization methods on W2A4 quantization settings across tasks of language modeling, commonsense QA, and language understanding. These results demonstrate that extreme low-bit quantization of LLMs can be both practical and highly effective without introducing any extra high-precision channels or rotational matrices commonly used in recent PTQ-based works, offering a promising path toward efficient LLM deployment in resource-limited situations.

Xu-Yao Zhang Yi Yang Siqing Song Chuang Wang Yong Lang
0 Citations
#2 2603.17809v1 Mar 18, 2026

Fine-Grained Post-Training Quantization for Large Vision Language Models with Quantization-Aware Integrated Gradients

Large Vision Language Models (LVLMs) have achieved remarkable success in a range of downstream tasks that require multimodal interaction, but their capabilities come with substantial computational and memory overhead, which hinders practical deployment. Among numerous acceleration techniques, post-training quantization is a popular and effective strategy for reducing memory cost and accelerating inference. However, existing LVLM quantization methods typically measure token sensitivity at the modality level, which fails to capture the complex cross-token interactions and falls short in quantitatively measuring the quantization error at the token level. As tokens interact within the model, the distinction between modalities gradually diminishes, suggesting the need for fine-grained calibration. Inspired by axiomatic attribution in mechanistic interpretability, we introduce a fine-grained quantization strategy on Quantization-aware Integrated Gradients (QIG), which leverages integrated gradients to quantitatively evaluate token sensitivity and push the granularity from modality level to token level, reflecting both inter-modality and intra-modality dynamics. Extensive experiments on multiple LVLMs under both W4A8 and W3A16 settings show that our method improves accuracy across models and benchmarks with negligible latency overhead. For example, under 3-bit weight-only quantization, our method improves the average accuracy of LLaVA-onevision-7B by 1.60%, reducing the gap to its full-precision counterpart to only 1.33%. The code is available at https://github.com/ucas-xiang/QIG.

Fanhu Zeng Hongjian Fang Ziwei Xiang Rui-Qi Wang Renxing Chen +4
1 Citations